Gathering Information about a Graph by Counting Walks from a Single Vertex

Abstract

We say that a vertex v in a connected graph G is decisive if the numbers of walks from v of each length determine the graph G rooted at v up to isomorphism among all connected rooted graphs with the same number of vertices. On the other hand, v is called ambivalent if it has the same walk counts as a vertex in a non-isomorphic connected graph with the same number of vertices as G. Using the classical constructions of cospectral trees, we first observe that ambivalent vertices exist in almost all trees. If a graph G is determined by spectrum and its characteristic polynomial is irreducible, then we prove that all vertices of G are decisive. Note that both assumptions are conjectured to be true for almost all graphs. Without using any assumption, we are able to prove that the vertices of a random graph are with high probability distinguishable from each other by the numbers of closed walks of length at most 4. As a consequence, the closed walk counts for lengths 2, 3, and 4 provide a canonical labeling of a random graph. Answering a question posed in chemical graph theory, we finally show that all walk counts for a vertex in an n-vertex graph are determined by the counts for the 2n shortest lengths, and the bound 2n is here asymptotically tight.

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